Sunday, July 24, 2016

MY REPRESENTATIVES COurage CARD - olgalazin@gmail.com - Gmail

nice to meet you - olgalazin@gmail.com - Gmail:





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SORGAM: 5 simple ways to coach yourself to better health - olgalazin@gmail.com - Gmail

Weekend Reading: 5 simple ways to coach yourself to better health - olgalazin@gmail.com - Gmail:



Very good for your health!

Redesigning the Human Education:

Dr Olga shares her thoughts on why our current education is leaving humanity flying well below its true potential, and what needs to shift so in our education system so we can start educating for the "whole human being" rather than "human being 1/10th".

JACKFOOD IS A superfood; taritze=sorghoum

Foods to Nourish Your Hair, Skin and Nails – Inside and Out;Your hair, skin, and nails are among the most visible parts of your body, so give them some love with healthy foods that provide just the nutrients they need to keep you looking and feeling good!

Jackfruit
Why You Need to Try Jackfruit Now (Especially if You're Vegan) If you’ve ever seen a jackfruit, you may have thought, “What on earth would I do with this?!?” On the outside, it’s a huge green blob covered in prickly skin. But on the inside, it’s a nutritional powerhouse waiting to be unleashed. Read on to learn more about this hot new superfood!
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Friday, July 22, 2016

Putin Smashes Hillary Clinton And Fareed Zakaria; Our Reel | Producers Group

Our Reel | Producers Group:



Rob Palmer The Producers Group WATCH Putin on the USA: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JBTBBNOtbhM

HELP USA! Please Share... share. MARTIAL LAW and FEMA CAMPS are coming for 2016!! ALL AMERICANS NEEDS TO WATCH THIS! Share... Share... this video must be shared with max number of people! make your part now, please share it! Because the Government Cover-up! Important: Before JUDGE, watch the whole video. MARTIAL LAW IMMINENT APPROACH! MUST SEE!! URGENT VIDEO PUBLIC UTILITY! OBAMA IS LEAKED! Let's share it to all Americans! Watch too this important video: MARTIAL LAW and ILLUMINATIS: This man brought them to US GOV decades ago at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pCQPV... This is an USA-NEWS Channel, subscribe it for more videos everyweek. *** LEGAL NOTE ***: This channel have copyright permissions for this video (permissions for images, permissions for sound and licence to reproduce some tv news). Please write to us asking for more informations at our INBOX Facebook Page SUBSCRIBE -- SUBSCRIBE -- NEW VIDEOS ALL WEEKEND Leave comments with your conclusion. Let's practive GRATITUDE: Share this video to help people understand the Truth. tcml Category

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History of Mexico Since Colonial Times to Present Drought Was The Cause for Extinction My Cours Udemy

History of Mexico Since Colonial Times to Present | Udemy:



The MAYAN Empire:

CLICK: http://olgamagdalenalazin.blogspot.com/2016/07/political-systems-empires-and-droughts.html

Link: http://www.udemy.com/since-colonial-times-to-present/learn/v4/content



Great Blue Hole off Belize yields new clues to fall of Mayan civilisation Research supports theory that drought and climate conditions reduced Mayans from a regional power to survivors abandoning cities to virtual extinction What are sinkholes and what causes them? Great Blue Hole Great Blue Hole, off Belize. Photograph: Alamy Alan Yuhas @alanyuhas Saturday 3 January 2015 15.04 EST Last modified on Friday 22 April 2016 07.19 EDT Share on LinkedIn Share on Google+ This article is 1 year old Shares 21,337 Comments 314 Save for later A massive underwater sinkhole surrounded by reefs, caves and sharks has provided archaeologists with clues in the mystery of the fall of the Mayan civilization, according to new research. Scientists from Rice University and Louisiana State University found evidence in Belize’s Great Blue Hole, a 400ft-deep cave in a barrier reef, that supports the theory that drought and climate conditions pushed the Mayans from a regional power to a smattering of rival survivors and finally a virtually lost civilization. The researchers took sediment samples from both the ancient sinkhole and the central Belize lagoon corresponding to the era of the Mayan decline, between 800 and1000 AD. In those samples they tested the ratio of aluminum and titanium – a sign of heavy rainfall from tropical cyclones pounding the element out of the rock and into the sea. Their study on the lagoon, which has yet to be published, complements one published last year in Scientific Reports on the Hole, and found relatively little titanium, meaning there had been fewer tropical cyclones and longer droughts than normal during those two centuries. Evidence of droughts as a factor in Mayan civilization’s long decline has been growing for years, including stalagmite evidence found in 2012, but the Great Blue Hole is better aligned with the path of storm systems passing over the ancient Mayan capital city of Tikal. The Yucatan peninsula lacks natural water resources, so the Mayans relied on rainfall that accumulated in limestone sinkholes – natural sinkholes called cenotes (sometimes also used for religious rituals) and manmade cisterns called chultunes. Several prolonged periods of drought, like those the evidence suggests, could have quickly drained the Mayans’ stores of potable water. Famine, unrest and war are natural consequences of a water crisis – the Mayans farmed on difficult soil and lived in a fractious, combative culture. By 900 AD any Mayan cities had been abandoned; a second period of droughts may have tipped the scales for other cities, as dirty water spread disease, dry weather killed crops and rival groups fought and fled in search of resources. Scientists have been puzzled for decades by the question of why the Mayans abandoned their cities and apparently forsook a civilization that gave them a script, elaborate art and architecture, sport, agriculture, trade and a three-tiered concept of time. Scientists have suggested war, climate, disease and politics as possible causes. Supporters of the drought hypothesis sometimes argue that it can assimilate many factors into a larger theory of systemic collapse. Mayan ruins Mayan ruins at Tulum in Quintana Roo, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. Photograph: Dallas and John Heaton/Alamy The major city of Chichen Itza, along the coast of the peninsula, thrived for about a century after 1000AD, almost certainly taking in Mayans who arrived from the arid south to build a revised iteration of Mayan culture in the north. Then, the Blue Hole research shows, a second period of droughts drained the peninsula, coinciding with the estimated time that Chichen Itza also quickly declined. Mayans did however continue to live there, albeit in smaller numbers, surviving the fall of their civilization, the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors and the changes of the centuries until the present day. Climate change and drought have been cited as likely causes in the decline of other civilizations. Yale archaeologist Harvey Weiss and University of Massachusetts climatologist Raymond Bradley argue that massive droughts changed history in the Middle East, devastating the Akkadian empire and Egypt’s Old Kingdom around 2200 BC; that sometime after 500 AD drought and floods forced Peru’s Moche civilization north; and that almost a thousand years later similar problems caused the Anasazi to abandon their cities in the North American south-west. *This article has been corrected to distinguish between published research on the Great Blue Hole and unpublished research on the lagoon. More news Topics Belize Americas Sinkholes Natural disasters and extreme weather Drought More… Share on LinkedIn Share on Google+ 'via Blog this'

Thursday, July 21, 2016

MORNING MEDITATION is USEFUL B/C We Are Relaxed: Sets YOU Up For A Successful Day, Make Urself More Productive


The Three Main Types Of Meditation In lesson 3 we're really getting into the best use of meditation for your specific needs: How to use Morning Meditation, Night-time Meditation & Yoga Meditation in a way that works for YOU and your daily requirements Morning Meditation: How to easily & naturally access your 'alpha' state of mind in the morning Enhancing this state by practicing morning gratitude Night time meditation: How OmHarmonics can smoothly guide you into a restful state Using meditation and autosuggestion to find answers to your problems in your dreams Yoga Meditation: Using OmHarmonics to assist in your practice, and give you the realignment you're looking for Today's Exercise: Plug in your headphones and listen to the track below for 15 minutes How to add Gratitude into your daily meditation: Think of 3-5 things in your personal life that you are grateful for Think of 3-5 things in your work life that you are grateful for Beyond simply expressing; bring back that exact feeling of experiencing those moments of pure gratitude and pleasure The Balance Meditation Track The Balance Meditation Track Tags; hop, productive, meditation, gratitude, correlation, transcendent, practice 1x 00:00 15:08 "The perfectly choreographed notes and..." Vishne for 30 days, it boosts 30% YOUR Happiness. NIGHT TIME MEDITATION: Track DEEP REST"

BINAURAL BEATS With OMHARMONICS; Day 2: Hacking Your Brainwaves - EEG Machins Meditation Mastery with OmHarmonics

GOAL OF MEDITATION:  but stay awake.

Day 2: Hacking Your Brainwaves - Meditation Mastery with OmHarmonics:



15 different varieties of brain waves.



In #1:  to

When we are in ALPHA  14 to 21: intuition





TETHA brainwaves, is like day dreaming';  flashes of insight, e. g. mendeleev dreamt the PERIOD in this state:



DELTHA: when we are knocked out sleeping.



BINAURAL BEATS. KEN WILBER; founder of Integral Theory.





210 - 215

      feel blissed OUT.

Paul has infused it with music. In spas, puts people in a relaxed state.



1.. THE START OF THE DAY

THE SPARK





DEEP REST.



LEARN COMPASSION PRACTICE;

observe ur thoughts.

-think of someone you deeply LOVE; sending It outside of YOUR body, see it extending to JIm, my community, the entire globe. See this bubble of love it actually makes you a kinder, gentler, compassionate person1





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Aké, A Classic Maya City in Yucatan - Conquista of Yucatan - Merida


The Building of the Columns at Aké, Yucatan, MexicoNeatguy
Aké is an important Maya site in northern Yucatan, around 20 miles from Mérida. The site lies within the terrains of an early 20th century henequen plant, a fiber used to produce ropes, cordage and basketry among other things. This industry was particularly prosperous in Yucatan, especially before the advent of synthetic fabrics. Some of the plant facilities are still in place, and a small church exists on top of one of the ancient mounds.


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Aké was occupied for a very long time, beginning in the Late Preclassic, around 350 BC, to the Postclassic period, when the place played an important role in the Spanish conquest of Yucatan. Aké was one of the last ruins to be visited by the famous explorers Stephens and Catherwood in their last trip to Yucatan.
In their book, Incident of Travels in Yucatan, they left a detailed description of its monuments.

Site Layout

The site core of Ake covers more than two hectares, and there are many more building complexes within the a dispersed residential area. Aké reached its maximum development in the Classic period, between AD 300 and 800, when the whole settlement reached an extension of four km2, and it became one of the most important Mayan center of northern Yucatan. From the site core a series of sacbeob (causeways, singular sacbe) connected the city with other nearby centers. The largest of these, which is almost 13 meters wide and 32 kilometers long, connected Aké with the city of Izamal.
Ake's core is composed of a series of long buildings, arranged in a central plaza and bounded by a semi-circular wall.
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The north side of the plaza is marked by Building 1, called Building of the Columns, the most impressive construction of the site. This is a long rectangular platform, accessible from the plaza through a massive stairway, several meters wide. The top of the platform is occupied by a series of 35 columns, which would have probably supported a roof in antiquity.
Sometimes called the palace, this building seems to have had a public function.
The site also includes two cenotes, one of which is near Structure 2, in the main plaza. Several other smaller sinkholes provided the community with fresh water.
Later in time, two concentric walls were constructed: one around the main plaza and a second one around the residential area surrounding it. It is unclear if the wall had a defensive function, but it certainly limited the access to the site, since the causeways, once connecting Aké to neighboring centers, were cross-cut by the construction of the wall.

Aké and the Spanish Conquest of Yucatan

Aké played an important role in the conquest of Yucatan carried out by Spanish conquistador Francisco de Montejo. Montejo arrived in Yucatan in 1527 with three ships and 400 men. He managed to conquer many Maya towns, but not without encountering a fiery resistance. At Aké, one of the decisive battles took place, where more than 1000 Maya were killed. Despite this victory, the conquest of Yucatan would be completed only after 20 years, in 1546.

Sources

This glossary entry is a part of the About.com guide to Mesoamerica , and the Dictionary of Archaeology.
AA.VV., 2006, Aké, Yucatán, in Los Mayas. Rutas Arqueológicas, Yucatán y Quintana Roo, Arqueología Mexicana, Edición Special, N.21, p. 28.
Sharer, Robert J., 2006, The Ancient Maya. Sixth Edition. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California
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By Nicoletta Maestri
Archaeology Expert


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The Building of the Columns at Aké, Yucatan, Mexico.  Neatguy
Aké .

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Chultun - Ancient Maya Storage Systems - Silozurile Mayase

Chultun - Ancient Maya Storage Systems: "





A chultun (plural chultunes, or chultunob in Mayan) is a bottle-shaped cavity, dug in the soft limestone bedrock typical of the Maya area. The name probably comes from the combination of two Yucatec Mayan words which mean rainwater and stone (chulub and tun). Another possibility is that the term comes from the word for clean (tsul) and tun, stone. These were traditionally used to store rainwater, but specialists think that they actually fulfilled many purposes.

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Early Descriptions of Chultun

An early description of chultunes comes from Bishop Diego de Landa, who in his “Relacion de las Cosas de Yucatan” (On the Things of Yucatan) describes how the Yucatec Maya dug deep wells near their houses and used them to store rainwater.
Later explorers John Lloyd Stephens and Frederick Catherwood speculated during their trip in Yucatan about the purpose of such cavities and were told by local people that these were used to collect rainwater during the rainy season.
More recent archaeological research has shown how different types of chultunes existed in the Maya region and have proposed that especially outside of the Yucatan peninsula these might have fulfilled different purposes.

Chultun in Northern Maya Lowlands

In the northern part of the Yucatan peninsula, chultunes have been frequently recorded where natural water sources called cenotes are absent. These chultunes are usually located near houses, are excavated directed in the limestone bedrock, and their internal walls often have a thick layer of plaster to make them waterproof. A small, plastered access hole to the interior subterranean chamber probably facilitated the capture of water.
In some sites, abandoned chultunes seem to have been used as trash deposits and in few occasions as burial places.
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Chultun in the Southern Maya Lowlands

In the Southern Maya Lowlands, such as the area of central Peten, archaeologists have found a slightly different type of chultun. These subterranean chambers are shallower and smaller than the ones recorded in Yucatan. In addition, these chultunes are accessed through a lateral chamber, making them less like a well; in relatively few cases their internal walls were plastered.
For these reasons archaeologists hypothesized that these features were possibly used for food storage, rather than water storage.
Experiments on the use of this type of chultunes were carried out in the late 1970s, around the site of Tikal. Archaeologists dug chultunes using ancient Maya technology and then used them to store crops such as maize, beans, and roots in order to study the results. The experiment showed that although the subterranean chamber offered protection against plant parasites, local humidity levels made the crops, especially maize, decay very quickly, after only a few weeks.
Experiments with seeds from the ramon, or breadnut tree, showed a better result: the seeds remained edible for several weeks without much damage. However, recent research has led scholars to believe that the breadnut tree did not play an important role in the Maya diet. It is possible that chultunes were used to store other types of food, ones that have a higher resistance to humidity, or only for a very short period of time.
Most recently, it has been proposed that chultunes could have been used for the preparation of fermented drinks, since their internal microclimate seems particularly favorable for this kind of process. The fact that many chultunes have been found in proximity of public ceremonial areas in several sites of the Maya lowlands, could be an indication of their importance during communal gatherings, when fermented beverage were most often served.

Conclusions

Chultunes are typical features not only of the Yucatan peninsula and northern Maya lowlands, which they are typically associated with, but they are widespread all over the Maya region. Different archaeological examples have shown how probably their uses were multiple and varied in time and space across the Maya region.

Sources

This glossary entry is a part of the About.com guide to Mesoamerica , and the Dictionary of Archaeology.
Puleston, Dennis, 1971, An Experimental Approach to the Function of Classic Maya Chultunes, American Antiquity, Vol. 36, No. 3: 322-335.
AA.VV. 2011, Los Chultunes, in Arqueologia Maya (accessed August 2011)



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